even that doesnt tell the story well enough, blaming “corporate greed” is too impersonal. corporations are made up of flesh and blood real people making conscious choices that help themselves and hurt others. the greed is human and the humans have names, THEY are collectively AND INDIVIDUALLY responsible.
When I want to make money, it isn’t greed. When someone else wants to make money, it is.
Interesting take
When the cost of essential goods is increased beyond the rate of inflation and the company in question subsequently reports all-time record profits, and those profits are going to people who are already in the top 10% of wealth holders whose daily lives aren’t actually impacted by not having that extra wealth, that’s greed harming the lives of everybody else. When someone working a standard 40 hours a week is asking for a cost of living raise because their current wage is below poverty income (which current federal minimum wage current is below that line), it’s basic human need to survive.
When the cost of essential goods is increased beyond the rate of inflation
Inflation is the measure of the cost of goods. You have cause and effect backwards here.
and those profits are going to people who are already in the top 10% of wealth holders
Wages are up across the board. Do you resent suppliers, warehouse staff, truck drivers, grocery employees, and distributors for making more money?
The only significant life changes that happened during the post-covid inflation was wages increasing. Hiring is up, wage pressure is up, union membership is way the fuck up.
Inflation happens because people have the money to support higher prices. It’s no more greed to raise prices there than it is for you to want to make more money.
We do have an issue in our society of wealth capture, and that’s a fixable problem we’ve seen steps toward. Wealth capture and inflation aren’t directly related or correlated, however.